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The RIPE Database [16] is a public database containing registration details of the IP addresses and AS numbers originally allocated to members by the RIPE NCC. It shows which organisations or individuals currently hold which Internet number resources, when the allocations were made and contact details. The organisations or individuals that hold ...
It is a successor to the WHOIS protocol, used to look up relevant registration data from such Internet resources as domain names, IP addresses, and autonomous system numbers. While WHOIS essentially retrieves free text, RDAP delivers data in a standard, machine-readable JSON format. [ 1 ]
1992 (RIPE NCC) 1993 (APNIC) 1997 (ARIN) 1999 (LACNIC) 2003 (NRO) 2004 (AFRINIC) Type: Internet governance: Focus: providing a coordinated Internet number registry system supporting the multi-stakeholder model: Origins: 1992 RIPE NCC begins distributing addresses 2003 letter from RIRs to ICANN 2004 Memorandum of Understanding
The organization was formed in December 1997 to "provide IP registration services as an independent, nonprofit corporation." Until this time, IP address registration (outside of RIPE and APNIC regions) was done in accordance with policies set by the IETF [7] by Network Solutions corporation as part of the InterNIC project.
This grace period is provided after a domain name registration period is explicitly extended (renewed) by the registrar. If the registrar deletes the domain name during this period, the registry provides a credit to the registrar for the cost of the renewal. serverDeleteProhibited: This status code prevents the domain from being deleted.
The NIC Handle system is no longer commonly used by domain name registries. It was previously possible to query WHOIS by NIC handle, and see all the domains registered by that NIC handle, but this service was discontinued (presumably due to spam). NIC Handles are still used extensively in the RIPE Database to identify people and business roles.
The RIPE community interacts via RIPE Mailing Lists, [1] [2] RIPE Working Groups, [3] and RIPE Meetings. [4] Although similar in name, the RIPE NCC and RIPE are separate entities. The RIPE NCC provides administrative support to RIPE, such as the facilitation of RIPE meetings [4] and providing administrative support to RIPE Working Groups. [3]
The pWhoIsd server software responds to standard whois queries and supports a variety of output formats (including Prefix WhoIs native, Cymru, and RPSL).; The pWhoIs-updatedb agent parses routing information bases (RIBs) from Internet routers or digests from route-views servers in text or MRT format and populates a relational database